Let's try not to include, sail a while then work a while, but how can you make money while sailing.

Keep the list going so the next idea is number 6.

We've moved away from Craigslist due to the money/security issue. I still sell some items there but the cash must be in-hand and the meeting place somewhere I feel safe. Ebay's fees aren't horrible but I still don't like to pay them if I don't sell my items.

I found this website called vFlea.com that only takes a commission after the sale is complete and they only work within Paypal. There's a link below to quick click.

If you prefer to work for yourself but you can't quite figure out the best way to generate income, there are several free online classes on entrepreneurship. The two big sites seem to be Coursera.org and Edx.org, both of which offer classes given by major universities. Here is a link to a class in entrepreneurship being offered by Coursera at the moment:

It does sound kinda counterintuitive to go on a course to learn entrepreneurship - but part of being an entrepreneur is sucking up information and skills wherever yer can....the art is making something from your collection (and going on courses is a way of helping to shorten yer ooops curve, or at least make it less painful!! The trick is being able to weed out those selling snake oil!).

For those whose plan is to fund selves on the hoof and their past / current liveilhood has been based around a 9-5 paycheck (nothing wrong with that - and much right!) why not practice / develop your entrepreneurial skills before casting off? It does not have to be about stuff boat related or indeed stuff you could do onboard, its about learning the dull end of managing a business, acquiring dull transferable skills and knowledge and being able to identify opportunities as they arise, know when to perservere and know when to try something else. Its not about funding your life ashore, nor risking much cash just investing your time in yourself.

Likely you will soon find the ideas are the easy bit! - the doing is the time consuming bit! that eats money bit by bit - much like boats!

" I still sell some items there but the cash must be in-hand"
FWIW, there have been police alerts out for several years now. Apparently a lot of folks are using counterfeit money to make buys on Craigslist. Someone gives you a couple of hundred dollar bills, gets a nice TV, and you've got nothing once the bank confiscates it as counterfeit.
Selling a canoe? Racing bike? Trailer? Four or five hundreds or ten fifties? Ayup, cash in the hand sadly is not reliable these days. Five and tens are more likely to be the real thing. There's a reason your 7-11 checks $20 bills.

I hate it when the nay-sayer's are correct, but that is not the case here. I've been trading commodity spreads per Delfin & MRCI for exactly 6 months now (check my posts) and I'm up ~$27,000 as of Fridays close with 100% of my original margin in tact. There have been weeks with losses, but I have always been up, and never into my own money. I currently have almost none of my money at risk, my profits cover most all of my margin ($27,000 of $31,000).
I guess I can't match SV Third Day's sister's part time internet results, as I've only averaged just over $1000/wk, but I hope that one day I will be as wise and knowledgeable as Third Day, or even his internet guru sister. Then I can make unsubstantiated (wise-ass) comments without any knowledge or experience to back them up.

99.9% of the time I would say exactly the same. However I have friend that may be the exception that proves the rule. For the last 4-5 years he has made 6 figure profits every year day trading. This part time while he holds down a "full time" job as well.

9However I have friend that may be the exception that proves the rule. For the last 4-5 years...

No offense to you or your friend, but the global economy has, in general, been improving over the last 4-5 years. Not very steadily, and quite slowly, with some isolated exceptions, but nonetheless improving. When he has been doing it long enough to go through a series of significant up and down cycles, THEN I might believe that he is "the exception that proves the rule."

Oh, and to the other poster... Six months? That's nothing. One lucky guess can get you well ahead over six months. Come back in ten years and tell us how you're doing.

No offense to you or your friend, but the global economy has, in general, been improving over the last 4-5 years. Not very steadily, and quite slowly, with some isolated exceptions, but nonetheless improving. When he has been doing it long enough to go through a series of significant up and down cycles, THEN I might believe that he is "the exception that proves the rule."

Oh, and to the other poster... Six months? That's nothing. One lucky guess can get you well ahead over six months. Come back in ten years and tell us how you're doing.

Global economy improving? Perhaps, but for whom? Also, I note those who see "improvement" expressed as increase vs past performance fail to include that when bottom is reached, the only movement possible is up. If volume was 100 widgets on average and falls to 10 on average, then touting 12 as a 20% increase is factual... but highly deceptive. Look at unemployment in the US as it's presented by the media.

In particular: "Due to Health Department requirements, they canít actually LIVE on the boat anymore but they maintain the functionality that makes this the most awesome tiny floating home around!"

I think there was a lot of winking going on in that last sentence. It would be a great idea if they could find somewhere that doesn't have as many regulations, doesn't mind them running a business, and can still source all the supplies they need.